Vol. 132 No. 2 This Article considers whether government agents can conduct searches or seizures to enforce a different government’s law. For example, can federal officers make stops...
Vol. 132 No. 2 Recent research indicates that labor market power has contributed to wage inequality and economic stagnation. Although the antitrust laws prohibit firms from restricting competition...
Vol. 131 No. 8 Of the roughly 450,000 Americans who are in local jails awaiting trial, many are there because they are poor. When people with economic resources...
Vol. 131 No. 8 The nature of the presidency cannot be understood without reference to norms. The written provisions of our constitutional structure do not, by themselves, offer...
Vol. 131 No. 8 The harmless constitutional error doctrine is as baffling as it is ubiquitous. Although appellate courts rely on it to deny relief for claimed constitutional...
Vol. 131 No. 7 What is a musical work? Philosophers debate it, but for judges the answer has long been simple: music means melody. Though few recognize it...
Vol. 131 No. 7 As it has been developed over a period of many decades, administrative law has acquired its own morality. An understanding of the morality of...
Vol. 131 No. 6 Private online platforms have an increasingly essential role in free speech and participation in democratic culture. But while it might appear that any internet...
Vol. 131 No. 6 Federal substantive criminal law and constitutional remedies might seem to be distinct bodies of law. But since the closing decades of the twentieth century,...
Vol. 131 No. 5 Presidents have come to dominate the making, interpretation, and termination of international law for the United States. Often without specific congressional concurrence, and sometimes...